due to the coin 's inertia. when the paper the coin tries to maintain their state of rest so it falls in the cup :D
If you slowly move the cardboard the coin on top will move with the cardboard. Law of Inertia. There is not enough force to drop the coin into the water.
Neglecting air resistance, the force on the coin is constant, whether the coin is moving up, moving down, stopped at its peak, or lying on the ground. The force is the force of gravity attracting the coin to the center of the earth. The force is technically known as the coin's "weight". While the coin is in the air, that's the one and only force acting on it, and its magnitude doesn't change.
A push or a pull
which of the additional COIN imperatives call for careful calculation of he type and amount of force applied
Gravity.
yes it will drop.
Card
Distortion
If you slowly move the cardboard the coin on top will move with the cardboard. Law of Inertia. There is not enough force to drop the coin into the water.
Neglecting air resistance, the force on the coin is constant, whether the coin is moving up, moving down, stopped at its peak, or lying on the ground. The force is the force of gravity attracting the coin to the center of the earth. The force is technically known as the coin's "weight". While the coin is in the air, that's the one and only force acting on it, and its magnitude doesn't change.
The meez vip card and coin card are the same.You can buy it at target for $10.The card gives you meez vip and 10,500 coins.
On the back of the card where is says to gently scrape off with a coin, scrape the silver away with a coin. The pin will be there!
A push or a pull
Certain cards place a counter called an A-Counter on other cards. You represent this with a coin, glass bead, or anything similar. Thus a card with one of these, becomes a card with an A-Counter. Since other kinds of counters exist in the game, it's up to the players to keep track of which is which.
You put the coin in a handkerchief over a glass of water. Then let someone hold the coin through the handkerchief. Then ask if anybody has a magic wand. If they don't. Next ask if anybody knows any magic words. Say the magic words and tell the person to drop the coin. Remove the handkerchief from over the glass of water. The coin should be gone. That is how I would do it. Oh I forgot one thing. When you put the coin in the handkerchief switch it with a clear glass disc.
The Arcana Force cards themselves are a good start. For example - Light Barrier allows you to toss a coin at the beginning of your turn (standby phase to be exact), and depending on that coins outcome could really help you. Also, seeing as this deck revolves heavily around coin-flipping, add cards such as Second Coin Toss and Lucky Change in - the Coin Toss lets you redo an outcome you didn't like, and Lucky Change allows you to draw a card if you correctly call the landing of the coin.
The Coin Paradox that addresses the need to assess when more force is required and when it may be counterproductive is the "Coin Push" paradox. This paradox questions the effectiveness of using more force to push a coin into a narrow opening versus using a gentler touch. It highlights the balance between applying force and finesse to achieve the desired outcome.